Friday, March 18, 2022 CapitalPress.com 3 Oregon farmers consider overtime adjustments By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press As a dairy farmer with fewer than 25 employees, Derrick Josi hypothetically shouldn’t worry about the phase-out of Oregon’s agri- cultural overtime exemp- tion recently approved by lawmakers. Josi’s overtime expenses would be fully paid by refundable tax credits under House Bill 4002, which passed the state Legislature and now awaits Gov. Kate Brown’s signature. Up to $55 million a year could be spent on such tax credits under the bill, but Josi doesn’t expect that to cover the requests from farmers seeking to offset higher overtime payments. Politically, it’s also unlikely the tax credits will be a permanent fixture, said Josi, who farms in Tilla- mook. “The first time there’s a budget crunch, that’s the first thing they’ll cut.” With that in mind, Josi is thinking of ways to cope with a 40-hour weekly over- time threshold for workers. Those plans don’t include paying time-and-a-half overtime wages, which the dairy couldn’t afford. If possible, Josi said he will hire more workers so that overtime hours aren’t necessary — until then, he’d expect to work more himself. Employee schedules will likely be reduced from about 60 hours to 36 hours per week, to leave a four-hour buffer against the threshold, he said. Workers will likely be given an hourly wage increase to mitigate the income loss, though at the expense of such cur- rent perks as meat, fuel and housing stipends, Josi said. Across the industry, it’s also likely workers will switch between farms to compensate for the limits on weekly hours imposed by employers, he said. “My employees are going to be hurt by it, I’m going to be hurt by it,” he said of Mateusz Perkowski/Capital Press Derrick Josi visits with his Jersey dairy cows in Tillamook, Ore. Josi said he’s making plans to change workers’ hours in anticipation of Oregon lawmakers voting to end the state’s agricultural overtime exemption. the overtime bill. “There’s definitely negative conse- quences for the employer and employees.” The bill was discussed during several hours-long committee hearings and floor debates during the 2022 legislative session, but the essence of the argument was simple. Supporters claimed the agricultural overtime exemption is rooted in rac- ism and denies farm work- ers their constitutional right to equal protection under the law. Critics countered that farmers receive prices set by global markets and can’t afford to a steep hike in labor expenses, which would force them to mecha- nize, change crops or go out of business. A coalition of state farm organizations has requested that Gov. Kate Brown veto HB 4002 but farmers con- tacted by Capital Press aren’t holding their breath for that outcome. Instead, they’re consid- ering how to adjust their operations over the next five years, when the over- time threshold is incremen- tally lowered to 40 hours per week. “This is definitely going to affect the hand-harvest of blueberries. There is no way we can afford to hand- pick once the overtime is implemented,” said Anne Krahmer-Steinkamp, a Wil- lamette Valley blueberry grower. Blueberries can be har- vested with mechanical pickers, but the process is tough on fruit, which has traditionally been sold into the frozen market. However, growers are able to earn higher prices for fresh fruit and the demand for fro- zen berries isn’t unlimited. “The frozen mar- ket’s been in the gut- ter the past 10 years,” said Krahmer-Steinkamp. Newer picking machines geared for the fresh market handle fruit more delicately, but cost up to $400,000 apiece. To meet her har- vest demand, Krahmer- Steinkamp will need four or five such pickers — a major capital outlay in an uncertain market. Fruit buyers will also need to be convinced that the new equipment won’t adversely affect quality at the retail level, which would hurt demand. “You need to get them onboard with that, she said. “You don’t want to put gar- bage on the market.” K r a h m e r- S t e i n k a m p said she expects to have a plan in place by the time HB 4002 is fully imple- mented. She’s reconsid- ering whether to replace older fields and expand her blueberry acreage, or whether to get out of the industry altogether. “I can definitely make more money doing some- thing else than I’m doing now,” she said. Labor-intensive crops will probably be abandoned by Oregon farmers, reduc- ing the state’s agricultural diversity — while requiring those items to be imported from countries with more lax labor laws, according to a vegetable grower who didn’t want to be named. The overtime policy approved by lawmakers is at odds with the state government’s support of restricting carbon emis- sions to prevent climate change, the farmer said. “You’re going to perpetuate that problem of increasing your food miles.” Mike Townsend, a farmer and fruit processor in Fair- view, said the overtime law’s impact will be particularly harsh on growers who rely on foreign guest workers. Under the federal H-2A program, employers must already provide those work- ers with transportation and housing while paying them substantially above the min- imum wage, he said. “How do you expect a farmer to survive in a world market with these increased costs?” Townsend said. Oregon’s nursery industry competes against other states that still have the overtime exemption and fewer other labor restrictions, said Pete Brentano, a nursery operator near St. Paul. Automation requires scale, so the brunt of the new overtime law will come down on those who are unable to mechanize, he said. “Most small nurseries can’t afford to do that.” Just since last autumn’s wine harvest, Pape Machin- ery has sold eight Pellenc grape harvesters in Oregon — the same number sold in the entire previous year, said Cody Starnes, territory sales manager for the company. Demand is likely to rise as the state’s agricultural over- time exemption is phased out, he said. “It’s been a hot button. We’ve been hearing more and more about that,” Starnes said. “I think we’re going to see more and more interest.” The machines can be more readily adjusted to fit a vineyard’s trellis system, which equates to less dam- age to the grapes, he said. They also incorporate func- tions to remove stems and blow away leaves. “With past machines, they were a lot more crude with how they handled the fruit,” Starnes said. “They were a lot less gentle.” At a cost of up to $480,000 per unit, the Pellenc system pays for itself in labor sav- ings within a year in vine- yards with 90 acres or more, he said. Oregon’s average vine- yard size is less than 30 acres. To accommodate machine harvest, vineyards will need to make changes such as replacing wooden stakes with metal ones, said Alex Sokol Blosser, a wine- maker near Dayton, Ore. The end of the overtime exemption was viewed as “an inevitability” in the state’s wine industry, but labor shortages have already been spurring more automa- tion, he said. Change is uncomfort- able but the industry must be willing to invest in resil- ience, Sokol Blosser said. “This is the decision you’re left with as a winemaker: Do you want to pick your grapes or not?” Health board backs off regulating farms By DON JENKINS Capital Press The Washington State Board of Health will pro- pose holding pet and live- stock owners responsible for keeping animal waste from becoming a health hazard or nuisance, but has backed away from regulating com- mercial livestock operations. The board was briefed March 9 on a rule that staff members plan to propose this month or next. The rule will authorize local health officials to investigate com- plaints about animal waste fouling water or someone else’s property. Unlike earlier proposals, the rule won’t try to comple- ment laws that apply to dair- ies, feedlots and other con- fined livestock operations and that are enforced by the state Department of Agri- culture and Department of Ecology. “It doesn’t step on the toes of other state agencies that have been given author- ity by the Legislature to be more involved with those large operations,” board Chairman Keith Grellner said. “I think we’re in a really, really good spot.” The new rule will update an old regulation that mostly concerns requiring horse stables inside cities to be regularly cleaned. For several years, the board’s staff flirted with amplifying the rule to restrict where manure can be stored. A staff report in 2018 on rewriting the rule focused on the environmental impact of dairies. The detail, scope and tone of previous proposals alarmed dairies, ranchers, feedlots and horse owners. 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